Health Checkup: How to Live 100 Years

A century of life was once a rare thing, but that is changing. Science is slowly unraveling the secrets of the centenarians

Longevity Drugs May Be Coming

Pharmacology

Plamen Petkov

Elixirs of youth sound fanciful, but the first crude antiaging drugs may not be so far away. To date, two compounds have sparked scientists' interest: resveratrol, a substance found in grapes, red wine and peanuts; and rapamycin, first isolated in the soil of Easter Island. Both compounds seem to work in animals to mimic the biological response to calorie restriction, an imperfectly understood technique that extends life span in lab specimens, including yeast, mice and, most recently, rhesus monkeys.

Resveratrol is currently available as a dietary supplement. A drug formulation of resveratrol is now being put to a more rigorous test, in clinical trials as a treatment for Type 2 diabetes and cancers. The company behind the drug, Sirtris Pharmaceuticals (bought by pharma giant GlaxoSmithKline in 2008), is touting that compound and two others — chemically unrelated to resveratrol but targeting the same pathway — as drugs that battle aging-related diseases.

Rapamycin, the other big candidate, has one clear advantage over resveratrol: it's already FDA approved as a drug — but as an immunosuppressant. Don't expect it to be rolled out to the masses as a miracle drug just yet though. Rapamycin leaves users susceptible to infection — at least in the doses typically used today — and has other harmful side effects too.

See Dr. Mehmet Oz's prescription for living long and living well.

Special Report: How to Live 100 Years.

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